Re: [LAD] OpenOctaveMidi2 (OOM2) beta release

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Am 27.01.2011 22:51, schrieb Alexandre Prokoudine:
On 1/27/11, Christopher Cherrett wrote:

We are not like Ardour asking for money all the time.

So much for groin-level kicks. You were approached in a civilized way.
Paying back with something like this is really low style.

I suspect there is much more to this puzzle than attribution. I suspect
we rocked the boat just a bit too much and too fast.

No, really not. Atrribution is very important. The whole DVCS thing
immensively helped there. Being able to be *automagically* quoted in
the log as developer made a lot of difference, and social coding
(Github, BitBucket etc.) made a lot of difference too, because it's
all about attribution (as well as being easy to fork, improve and send
merge request).

Yep, I personally knew that OOM2 was based on MusE2 even before
compiling and running,

The casual informed Linux Audio user will find out, as soon as he/she opens Settings/MIDI Connections and Synths in the Menu.

DeicsOnce, Simpledrums etc -- all the stuff known to be MUSE-specific.

As I saw the screenshots I thought "Interesting, looks like a mix of Ardour 0.9x and Muse." Now, that I see it running, the ancestor is plain to see.

@oom-people
So I guess, most people will notice that and many will ask themselfs: "Why do these people use to talk about their own hard work and do not care to mention the work of the Muse-people?"

Some will think, because you *are* the Muse-people actually. Maybe some newbies may find your app first and Muse later and maybe they will write in forums, that Muse is just a ripoff of OOMidi. Just because most people in the free software-culture are not prepared for habits like this. They do not expect talented free coders of big applications to take advantage of the work of others without even mentioning these others. Call it naive -- many people come to the world of GNU because they think, it is a culture of undisputed respect, courtesy and decency. They flee from a culture of selfishness.

A free license allows you to take advantage of the work of others without any economical constrains. You do not need to pay, you do not even need to ask. Right so! But if the giver is freindly enough to give that way, the taker should be ready to return the due respect.

If you would have answered to Pauls post saying something like "Yeah, we will add a line to our website thanking Werner and the others -- we just forgot to do, we were too much into coding the last weeks etc etc "

I think most people would have said, Ok, forget about that glitch.

But now you actually claim the right to neglect courtesy and respect.
The most prudent thing I read from you in this discussion was "We need some sleep."
Absolutely! Have a nap and think about the issue again...

best regards

HZN



but this is because being curious is my job,
and reading the commit log at github was so easy. But you know, I
don't expect everyone to be a journalist. Do you?

Having said that, I do see potential in the project as well and I'll
be tracking its progress with interest.

Alexandre Prokoudine
http://libregraphicsworld.org
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